Monday, August 10, 1998 Last modified at 12:20 a.m. on Monday, August 10, 1998

Kenyan and Israeli soldiers try to clear rubble from the wreckage of the Ufundi House in Nairobi Sunday, Aug. 9, 1998 where many more dead are feared buried in the rubble caused by a terrorist explosion on Friday August 7 1998. AP PhotoBombing deaths number at least 210

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) ? Urging trapped and weakened survivors not to give up, rescue teams took hope themselves Sunday from the whispered response of a woman wedged in the debris ? while lifting 20 more dead out of the wreckage near the U.S. Embassy.

The death count from Friday's nearly simultaneous bombings in Kenya and Tanzania rose to 210, including 12 Americans. The body of the last missing American, Consul General Julian Bartley was identified Sunday. His son, Jay, a university student from San Diego, also died.

More Americans joined search-and-rescue efforts Sunday that hadn't slowed ? and still were turning up survivors ? two days after the blasts.

Americans, Kenyans and Tanzanians mourned the dead in Sunday church and memorial services, praying for the thousands injured and scores missing. Roman Catholic Archbishop Rafael Ndingi reminded that retribution is God's business: ''Forgive the one who is the cause of this.''

All but 10 of the 210 dead were killed in the Nairobi blast. A total of 4,877 people were injured; about 560 remain hospitalized. All 12 American deaths were in Nairobi.

Several hundred U.S. investigators were ''setting up shop'' to find out who was behind the attacks, according to embassy spokesman Bill Barr. The FBI has said its top priority is to determine the type of explosive device and vehicle that carried it to the scene.

Kenyan President Daniel arap Moi visited the devastated embassy site Sunday morning and said there were some leads but did not elaborate.